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Academic Commons Search Resultsen-usBody Mass Estimation from Human Skeletal Remains: An Anthropometric Assessment of Nutritional Status in the New York African Burial Ground Populationhttps://academiccommons.columbia.edu/catalog/ac:199607
Oppenheimer, Juliahttp://dx.doi.org/10.7916/D8Z0388RFri, 03 Jun 2016 15:44:33 +0000The New York African Burial Ground (NYABG) Project unearthed a population of enslaved and free Africans who lived under severe stress in 18th century Manhattan. Body mass estimation from human skeletal remains offers new insights into the nutritional status of adults and children from the New York African Burial Ground. Anthropometric data from the New York African Burial Ground Project database were used to estimate body mass, stature, and body mass index (BMI) for a skeletal sample of adults (≥18 years, n=110) and subadults (0–17.5 years, n=13). Adult body mass and BMI estimates were assessed relative to the 1960–1962 National Health Examination Survey (NHES) dataset (18–74 years) and the World Health Organization (WHO) international classification of underweight, overweight, and obese. Subadult body mass, stature, and BMI estimates were compared to the 2006 WHO Child Growth Standards and 2007 WHO Growth Reference (0–19 years) and evaluated for stunting (Height ≤ WHO 5%, BMI > -2SD) and wasting (Height > 5%, BMI ≤ -2SD). Mean differences in adult male and female body mass between the NYABG and NHES samples were statistically significant (p < 0.001), yet adult male and female BMI estimates fell unanimously within the normal and overweight ranges (18.5–30.0 kg/m2). Minor sex differences in mean adult BMI estimates were statistically insignificant (p=0.104). Young subadults (0-9 years) showed widespread stunting and wasting compared to the WHO growth charts, indicating both chronic and acute physiological stress. These results suggest that the children of the New York African Burial Ground were disadvantaged nutritionally compared to the adult sample, who sustained high muscle mass in response to strenuous labor. The consideration of biomechanics and body composition in the analysis of human skeletal remains is critically important for assessing nutritional status at the time of death, and serves as a powerful addition to the bioarchaeological toolset.Physical anthropology, Archaeology, African Burial Ground (New York, N.Y.), Body mass index, African Americans--Anthropometry, Human growthjeo2125Anthropology (Barnard College)Undergraduate thesesSomos Españoles aqui: Dialect as an index of pride and cultural difference in Buenos Aireshttps://academiccommons.columbia.edu/catalog/ac:147155
Plunkett, Clare C.http://hdl.handle.net/10022/AC:P:13300Wed, 23 May 2012 11:12:00 +0000A dialect is linked to social identity and a distinctive scheme of cultural values, and in this paper I show that the traits of the Buenos Aires dialect are linked to the characterization of its citizens as "snobby." Specifically there are two key traits that do not appear as standardized aspects of any other South American country's habla culta, or chosen national dialect. These are the vos, a pronoun that completely eclipses the tu as the standard second-person singular; and the pronunciation of sheismo, wherein the double L is a voiceless post-alveolar sibilant fricative, and is pronounced as the "s" sound in "mission." This paper will examine films, prescriptives, utterances, metadiscourse and individual survey data in order to analyze these particularities of rioplatense Spanish and their implications in production and perceptions of Argentinian culture.Language, Cultural anthropology, Latin American studiesccp2128Anthropology (Barnard College)Undergraduate theses